Hello Lehel

On 11.12.2011 14:33, biro lehel wrote:
what I've been referring to. I will have OpenNebula set up,
and (as common sense would tell) I will have my application
installed on the created VM's. My question only referred to:
how can I install an application on these VM's (should I only
just copy it, or is it more complex than this), or stuff like:

Look at the VM like at any other physical computer. It is just a container (eg. a virtual computer) where you can install the OS of your choice. The installation of your application inside the OS of your VM needs to be done the same as you would do it on a physical computer. But the installation of the OS in the VM needs to be done first. See my recent posting "Re: Creating virtual machines from scratch" [1] to this mailing list.

[1] http://lists.opennebula.org/pipermail/users-opennebula.org/2011-December/007156.html

Look at an OpenNeubla cluster / cloud like on an additional abstraction layer between a physical computer and your OS installation.

An example:
If you have 3 computers, you can install on each one the OS of your choice and run it, but then you have only 3 concurrent running OS installation available. With OpenNebula you need to install Linux on all 3 computers (1x front-end and 2x cluster nodes). The cluster nodes also need to support some kind of hypervisor (eg. KVM or XEN). Then you install OpenNebula on the front-end and then adjust the configuration for the shared file systems to be used by the cluster nodes. Then you can create VMs (virtual machines / virtual computers) and deploy them through the front-end (with Sunstone you also have a web GUI). Now you can create as many VMs as the two cluster nodes can support (depending on CPU power an available memory). You even can stop or terminate VMs and reuse them (with persistent image) at a later time.

can the different tiers of the application (interface,
business logic, and data repository) be on different VM's, but

Sure, they can.

most importantly: how can an end-user (not the administrator,
but a potencial client) use the application? Or there is no
such thing as the "end-user / client" concept in OpenNebula,
since the only user is the administrator who has control over
the infrastructure? If OpenNebula provides IaaS support, I

In OpenNebula the administrator has full control over the running VMs, eg. he can stop (pause), resume or even shutdown / destroy them. OpenNebula also knows users, which eg. could create their own VMs (with their choice of OS installation) or can use pre-created shared system image to boot a VM. But as far as I know, out of the box OpenNebula is not able to provide virtualization on application level. But it has a very open and flexible design and you should be able to customize it to your needs, eg. with contextualization.

suppose this means that he does not have control over the
application only as a service, but rather he, as the admin,
has control over the whole "physical" application?

What do you understand as "physical" application?

OpenNebula controls the distribution and monitoring of the VMs. It will place a newly created VM on a cluster node which has the requested requirements and resources available. It also manages all the system images (persistent and public / shared) and network interfaces (done through bridges) which the VMs need to run.


bye
Fabian
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